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The Lutheran Approach.


It was inevitable that, sooner or later, the Protestant Churches, protesting against Roman autocracy, should seek to find out about a Church which had made such a protest from the earliest times. Even before the great Reformation movement the Hussites had made overtures to the Orthodox. In 1451 a Bohemian whom the Greeks called Constantine Platris and surnamed the Englishman — he was probably the son of a Lollard refugee settled in Bohemia — came to Constantinople with letters to the Orthodox authorities. There was no Patriarch in the city at the time, Gregory Mammas having retired a few months previously to Rome, as his bishops would not support his policy of union. The Englishman was received by the dissident bishops, who formed a body known as the Synaxis, as they could not, without the Patriarch, call themselves the Synod. Friendly messages, full of denunciations of Roman pretensions, were exchanged. But the fall of the city little more than a year later prevented further negotiations.359

Martin Luther’s chief interest in the Eastern Question lay in the belief, which he shared with many of his evangelical contemporaries, and with many of the Greeks themselves before the fall of Constantinople, that the end of the world was near and that the Grand Turk was Antichrist: though he had an alternative candidate in the person of the Pope. The Turks were a scourge sent from Heaven to punish Christendom for its sins and its lapses from the true faith. Consequently, though he sincerely dreaded their advance, he had no compunction in causing political trouble to the Emperor Charles V, who alone in Europe, had he been allowed, might have dealt with the scourge. Nor did he feel any sympathy with the Greeks, with their decadent and idolatrous Church, who were already undergoing the scourging. Much as he loathed Rome, he did not consider that Constantinople had any better right to claim a primacy over the Christian hierarchy. The true mother-Church was that of Jerusalem, the city of which Christ Himself had been bishop. It alone was entitled to claim world allegiance. Divine retribution, helpfully provided by the Devil, had seen to the punishment of Constantinople at the hands of the Muslims; and the sack of Rome in 1527 should be a warning to the Papacy. But Luther had a dual personality. When he was swayed by his powerful mind and not by his powerful emotions he felt more kindly about the Greeks. He was a devoted student of the early Greek Fathers; and, after all, Greek was the language of the New Testament. In his disputation with Eck, when Eck declared that the Greek Church was schismatic because of its repudiation of Roman authority and that it had been the breeding-ground of heretics such as Nestorius, Eutyches and Achatius, Luther answered sternly that the Greeks were not schismatic as they had never from the earliest days admitted the supremacy of Rome, and that the Western Church itself had produced its heretics, its Pelagians, its Manichaeans and its Jovinians. He was unimpressed by Eck’s reference to the Union of Florence, the unreality of which he clearly saw. The Greek Church, he concluded, represented the true tradition of early Christianity far better than did the theologians of Rome.360

Luther himself was a reactionary in temperament, disliking the spirit of the Renaissance. But his leading disciples were children of the Renaissance. The most distinguished of them, Philip Melanchthon, had been professor of Greek at Wittenberg and was deeply interested in Hellenism. His interest extended to the contemporary Greeks; and he thought that it would be valuable to establish a friendly understanding with the Greek Church.361

The difficulty was to find out how to make contact with the Greeks. The only European powers in diplomatic relations with the Ottoman Empire were Catholic: Venice, France, and the Habsburg dominions. It was, he thought, through Venice, with its colony of Greek scholars, its Greek possessions and its lack of religious intolerance that an approach could best be made, particularly if a Greek scholar could be found there who was in touch with the East and had not joined the Roman faith.

There was among the intellectuals at Venice a man known as Antony the Eparch. He was a Corfiot of good family who had gone to Venice as a boy, when Turkish attacks on Corfu made life there difficult, and had been educated at a school organized by the Roman Church for the benefit of Greek refugees and directed by Arsenius Apostolis. Antony became for a time professor of Greek at Milan. But, though he moved in Catholic circles he seems never to have joined the Catholic Church. It was with him that Melanchthon decided to get into touch. In about 1542 Melanchthon either wrote to him or sent him a message through a friend, to ask for his sympathy with the Reforming movement. In 1543 Antony replied in a long letter addressed to Melanchthon. It was a courteous but not a very sympathetic reply. We do not know what Melanchthon had said. Antony’s letter showed only a slight interest in theology but a passionate devotion to the cause of Greek freedom. On the theological issues he merely indicated that he considered some of the Lutheran doctrines to be wrong-headed. It was the political side of the Reformation that concerned him; and he thought that to be dangerous and disastrous. The Lutherans were encouraging intrigue and even rebellion against the authority of Charles V, whom he believed, as did many others, to be the only man who might be able to drive the Turks out of Europe. The letter, which was lengthy and ornamented, in the true Renaissance style, with quotations from Hesiod, Sophocles, Aristophanes, Hippocrates, Plato, Demosthenes and the Greek Anthology, accused the Reformers of being trouble-makers at a time when peace in the Church was desperately needed to defeat the forces of Antichrist. Melanchthon was politely but firmly told to read the lessons of history.362

Melanchthon was disappointed. He told one of his pupils, Matthew Irenaeus Francus, to ask his friend Joachim Camerarius, the professor of Greek at Leipzig, to compose a reply. Later in 1543 Camerarius sent to Irenaeus the draft for a letter to Antony. In it Camerarius maintained, with equal verbosity but fewer Classical quotations, that no one was more eager for concord than Melanchthon and his followers, but that the Papists had made concord impossible by the corruption of their hierarchy and the distortions that they had introduced into the True Faith and their neglect and misinterpretation of the Scriptures. Camerarius might have gone further and pointed out a basic flaw in Antony’s argument. For when the Catholic powers of France and Venice and the Papacy itself were united in an aggressive alliance against Charles, as happened in that year 1543, it was scarcely fair to put all the blame on the Lutherans if Charles was unable to take effective action against the Turks.363



In fact it seems that no reply was sent to Antony the Eparch. After all, he only represented the Greeks of Venice. It was with the Patriarchate of Constantinople itself with which the Reformers of Wittenberg wished to make contact. They had to wait for more than ten years before an opportunity arose.

In 1555 Melanchthon made friends with a Greek-born adventurer, James Basilicus Marchetti, self-surnamed the Heraclid. James Basilicus was a remarkable character even for that age of adventurers. He was the subject of much speculation in his lifetime, and his biography was later written by his court-poet, Johann Sommer, and by an angry Papal Legate in Poland, Antonio Maria Graziani, and, more shortly, by a Hungarian bishop, Heinrich Forgach. He was born about the year 1515. According to his own story he was the son of the hereditary Prince of Samos and Paros, who belonged to the ancient family of the Heraclids, descended from the Kings of Epirus and from the hero Heracles himself. His parents and brother were killed by order of Sultan Selim I; but his nurse rescued him and took him to Crete. There he studied at the school run by the scholar Hermodorus Lestarchus: or so he told Melanchthon. His biographer Sommer says that he was educated in Chios, which is more convincing, as Lestarchus did run an academy there for a while. There was no future for the boy in Greece; so he went to the West and took service in Charles V’s army. His Catholic biographers gave him a humbler origin. Graziani says that he was the son of a Cretan sailor attached to the Heraclid lord of Samos. His master found him clever and attractive and had him well educated, and eventually employed him as secretary. When the Heraclid died in exile at Coron in the Peloponnese, James Basilicus so effectively controlled the household that he could threaten its members to withhold the legacies due to them from the dead man unless they all signed a declaration that he was really the Heraclid’s nephew. Forgach varies the story by making the young man abscond on his master’s death with all the family papers. Charles V’s troops were temporarily occupying Coronatthe time; and, when they abandoned it in 1533, James Basilicus went with them. He spent twenty-two years in Charles’s army, serving in Germany under Count Wolrad of Mansfeld and later, in France, under Count Gunther of Schwarz-burg, fighting with distinction. In 1555 he was at Charles’s court at Brussels. There he showed the Imperial chancery his papers and a family tree that he had compiled. Charles, who wished to reward him for his military prowess, was sufficiently impressed to award him the title of Count Palatine. This carried with it the right to nominate a poet laureate; he gave the post to his future biographer Sommer. But he was unpopular in Catholic circles because he dabbled in necromancy and prophesied with the aid of numerology disasters for the new Pope, Paul IV. When Charles V abdicated later that year, it was time for him to move. Armed with introductions from the Counts of Mansfeld and Schwarz-burg, both of them Protestants, and from a friend of his, Justus Jonas, whom he had met on the French campaign and who was the son of one of Luther’s closest associates, he appeared at Wittenberg. Melanchthon was delighted by this distinguished, cultivated Greek, who persuaded him that an alliance between the Lutherans and the Church of Constantinople could be easily achieved. James Basilicus had a talent for finding eminent relatives. He now claimed that the Patriarch, Joasaph II, was his cousin; and he assured Melanchthon that Joasaph would be most sympathetic, and that he himself would help in every possible way.

Melanchthon sent him on with a cordial introduction to King Frederick II of Denmark, who received him amiably and encouraged him to visit various Protestant lords in Lettonia and Poland. But his ambitions were growing. He learnt that the Prince of Moldavia, Alexander IV Lapuchneanu, was a savage and moody man, more interested in his cattle and pigs than in his subjects, and consequently very unpopular. James Basilicus’s researches now proved to him that Alexander’s wife Roxandra was another of his cousins. He arrived in Moldavia in 1558 to pay her a cousinly visit and was made welcome at her court at Jassy. But after a few months Alexander discovered that his wife’s new cousin was plotting to displace him. James Basilicus had to flee, first to Cronnstadt in Transylvania, where he consoled himself by publishing his remarkable family tree, and then to Poland to see his Protestant friends there. After an unsuccessful attempt in 1560, in 1561 he invaded Moldavia with a force of Polish auxiliaries. Alexander was defeated and fled to Constantinople; and James Basilicus took over the Principality of Moldavia under the title of John I.



James Basilicus, or John I, saw himself as an enlightened and progressive ruler. His reign started well. An embassy laden with gifts and composed of boyars who had suffered under Alexander secured the good will of Moldavia’s suzerain, the Sultan, and the confirmation of his title. King Sigismund Augustus of Poland, who had hitherto disapproved of him, now sent to congratulate him and permitted him to propose marriage to a noble Polish lady, Cristina Zborowska, daughter of the Governor of Cracow. The Emperor Ferdinand suggested to him that they might make a joint campaign against the Turks. But the new Prince’s views on enlightenment did not please his staunchly Orthodox subjects. James Basilicus was Orthodox by birth. He may, like many Greeks who had migrated to the West, at some time have submitted to Rome. But he had been greatly impressed by the Lutherans. He may have been sincere when he encouraged Melanchthon to attempt to ally the Lutheran and Orthodox Churches; but his own method of doing so in Moldavia was to try to reform the Orthodox Moldavian Church along Lutheran lines. Without any reference to his cousin, the Patriarch of Constantinople, he appointed a Polish Protestant, Jan Lusinsky — or John Lusinius — to be Archbishop of Moldavia. Lusinsky not only shocked the Moldavians by possessing a wife, whom he brought with him to Jassy; but he began his attack on the Church by ordering a reform of its practices over the annulment of marriages. The Orthodox Church in general permits divorce through ecclesiastical courts, though it frowns on more than one subsequent remarriage. But divorce and dispensations for additional remarriages were easily obtainable in Moldavia and Wallachia; and Lusinsky was determined to root out what seemed to him to be sheer polygamy. He also had plans to dissolve monasteries and remove icons from churches. But in 1562 he died, almost certainly poisoned. James Basilicus did not long survive. The Moldavians were angry at his reliance on Protestant Poles; and, when it was learnt that his future bride, Cristina Zborowska, was the daughter of a man who, while Governor of Cracow, was also the leader of an anti-Trinitarian sect, there was horrified dismay. But the Prince’s downfall came when he began to confiscate money and precious objects from the monasteries. His finances were in a bad way. The ex-Prince Alexander had made off with much of the national treasure; and the revenue of the Principality, large though it was, was not large enough to pay for the expensive administration that he set up, as well as the tribute and bribes demanded by the Sublime Porte. The last straw was his attempt to confiscate holy relics. Riots broke out in which Archbishop Lusinsky’s wife was murdered, as was a bastard daughter of the Prince; and the poet laureate Sommer was forced, he tells us, to live for three weeks hidden in orchards and woodlands. The Prince vainly summoned help from over the border. His Catholic neighbours would not intervene, and the Polish Protestants were too few. He held out for three months against the rebels in one of his fortresses; then, in 1563, he surrendered and was put to death. So ended the attempt to introduce Lutheranism into south-eastern Europe.364

Calvinism was later to achieve a certain success over the Carpathians, in Transylvania, but at the expense of Catholicism, not of Orthodoxy, the converts being Hungarians rather than Roumanians.

The strange career of James Basilicus did not help future relations between the Lutherans and the Orthodox. There is no direct reference to him in any contemporary Greek source. But his ‘cousin’, the Patriarch Joasaph, must have known of his efforts and cannot have liked them. Abundant evidence shows that the Patriarchate was worried by missionary work in the Principalities; and the missionaries were not all Catholic.

Melanchthon did not live to hear of his friend’s fate in Moldavia. He died in 1560. But rather more than a year earlier he had received at Wittenberg an elderly cleric from Montenegro called Demetrius, who came with an introduction from James Basilicus. Nothing is known of Demetrius’s early history. He was already an old man when he met James in Moldavia in 1558. Demetrius made an excellent impression in Lutheran circles. Melanchthon liked him; and Nicholas Hemmingius wrote in a letter that he was an old man of exemplary piety and admirable morals, whose claim to be a deacon was undoubtedly genuine, though the Lutherans could not check up on this; he was certainly full of erudition about his Church. Here was a heaven-sent agent for achieving the desired contact with Constantinople. In order that the Orthodox might be properly informed about the Reformed religion, the Confession of Augsburg, which summarized Lutheran belief, was hastily but ably translated into Greek by a learned Hellenist, Paul Dolscius of Plauen; and a copy was given to Demetrius to deliver to the Patriarch, together with a personal letter from Melanchthon, which barely touched upon doctrine but suggested that the Lutheran and Greek Churches had much in common.365

Demetrius left on his journey late in 1559. Melanchthon died before an answer could have easily been returned; but his fellow-divines waited for many more months for news from Constantinople. At last they decided that Demetrius could not have delivered the letter. In fact he arrived at Constantinople at the end of 1559 and was received by the Patriarch. But the documents that he brought embarrassed Joasaph and the Holy Synod. A brief glance at the Confession of Augsburg showed that much of its doctrine was frankly heretical. But it would be undesirable to spoil relations with a potential friend. The Patriarch and his advisers took refuge in the favourite device of oriental diplomacy. They behaved as if they had never received the communication, which they carefully mislaid.366 Demetrius waited for two or three months for a reply to carry back to Wittenberg. When none was forthcoming he did not venture to return to Germany. He moved to Transylvania, where he spent three years trying to introduce Lutheranism into its villages, encouraged by James Basilicus. After James’s fall he carried on his propaganda in the Slav dominions of the Habsburg Emperor. The date of his death is unknown.367

The subsequent events in Moldavia must have confirmed Joasaph in his suspicion of the Lutherans. Some fifteen years later the atmosphere improved. The Habsburg Emperors employed a number of Lutheran officials. In about 1570 an Imperial Ambassador arrived at Constantinople who was a Protestant, David von Ungnad; and he brought with him as chaplain an eminent Lutheran scholar, Stephen Gerlach, who was in close touch with the Lutheran universities in Germany. Gerlach soon made friends with the learned Protonotary of the Great Church, Theodore Zygomalas, who introduced him to the Patriarch Jeremias II, then in his first term of office. In return he put Zygomalas into touch with the leading professor of Greek in Germany, Martin Kraus, or Crusius, of Tubingen, a man interested not only in Classical Greek but also in the Greek world of his time. Through Zygomalas Crusius entered into correspondence with the Patriarch Jeremias, whom he greatly admired.368

When such friendships were established it was natural for the Lutherans to press again for closer ecclesiastical relations with the Greeks. In 1574 Ungnad was prompted by Gerlach to write to Germany to ask for fresh copies of the Confession of Augsburg. In reply six copies were sent out by Crusius and Jacob Andreae, Chancellor of the University of Tubingen. One was to be given to the Patriarch, one to Zygomalas, one to Metrophanes, Metropolitan of Berrhoea, one to the scholar Gabriel Severus, and one to the rich layman, Michael Cantacuzenus, who had promised to have it translated into vernacular Greek. A copy translated into Georgian was dispatched a little later, for transmission to the Orthodox Church of Georgia in the Caucasus. To the Patriarch’s copy the Lutheran divines added a letter, in which they said that, though because of the distance between their countries there was some difference in their ceremonies, the Patriarch would acknowledge that they had introduced no innovation into the principal things necessary for salvation; and that they embraced and preserved, as far as their understanding went, the faith that had been taught to them by the Apostles, the Prophets and the Holy Fathers, and was inspired by the Holy Spirit, the Seven Councils and the Holy Scriptures.369

What the Georgians thought of the Confession of Augsburg, if their copy ever reached them, is unrecorded. To the Greeks it was as embarrassing as it had been fifteen years previously. Cantacuzenus did nothing about its translation into the vernacular. But Jeremias could not ignore the Confession as Joasaph had done. Von Ungnad and Gerlach were close at hand, pressing for an answer. After a little hesitation Jeremias wrote a polite letter of thanks to Tubingen, promising to send a statement on doctrinal points a little later. These delaying tactics were vain; Gerlach continued to ask for his views. At last, after consulting with the Holy Synod, the Patriarch, with the help of Zygomalas and his father John, composed a full answer to the various points in the Confession. The letter was dated 15 May 1576.

The Confession of Augsburg contains twenty-one articles. Jeremias replied to each in turn, stating wherein he agreed or disagreed with the doctrines contained in them. His comments are valuable, as they add up to a compendium of Orthodox theology at this date.

The first article states the Nicene Creed to be the basis of the true faith. The Patriarch naturally concurred, but pointed out that the Creed should be accepted in its correct form, omitting the Dual Procession of the Holy Ghost, an addition which, as he explains at length, was canonically illegal and doctrinally unsound.

In the original Confession the second article proclaims original sin, the third is a summary of the Apostles’ Creed and the fourth declares that man is justified by faith alone. In the Greek version the second and third articles change place: which is more logical. The Patriarch’s second chapter therefore deals with the Creed. While approving of the Germans’ summary he adds for their benefit twelve amplifying articles which, he says, contain the traditional doctrine of the Church. Three concern the Trinity, six the Incarnation, the Crucifixion and the Redemption, and three the life hereafter. He gives further glosses to these and appends a list of the seven cardinal virtues- — he actually gives eight — and the seven deadly sins.

On original sin the Patriarch takes the opportunity of pointing out that baptism should be by triple immersion and not by aspersion, and should be followed up by chrismation. The baptismal practice of the Latins is, he says, incorrect.

In his fourth chapter, on justification by faith alone, the Patriarch points out, quoting Basil, that grace will not be given to those who do not live virtuous lives. He amplifies his views in his fifth and sixth chapters. In the Confession the fifth article says that faith must be fed with the help of the Holy Scriptures and the Sacraments, and the sixth that faith must bear fruit in good works, though it repeats that good works alone will not bring salvation. Jeremias takes for granted the doctrine given in the fifth article, and uses the chapter to continue his previous argument. The Sermon on the Mount lists virtues that will bring salvation without any reference to faith. Faith without works is not true faith. In the sixth chapter he warns the Germans not to presume on grace nor despair of it. He makes it clear that he disapproves of anything that might suggest predestined election.

The seventh article of the Confession declares that the Church is one and eternal, and the sign of its unity is that the Gospel shall be rightly taught and the Sacraments rightly administered. So long as this is fulfilled, differences in ritual and ceremonial do not impair its unity. Jeremias agrees; but he goes on to talk about the Sacraments. Suspecting that the Lutherans held baptism and the eucharist to be the only Sacraments, he insists that there are seven Sacraments, baptism, chrismation, ordination, marriage, penitence and extreme unction. These are what Isaiah means when he speaks of the seven gifts from the Lord.

Jeremias concurred with the eighth and ninth articles in the Confession. The former says that Sacraments do not lose their validity even when administered by evil priests. The latter recommends infant baptism, so that the child may be at once qualified to receive grace.

The tenth article was more controversial. It says that the body and blood of Christ are truly present at the Lord’s Supper and are distributed to those who participate in it; and those who teach otherwise are condemned. So far the Patriarch could agree. But he may have learnt that the original German version of the Confession added the words ‘unter der Gestalt des Brods und Weins’ — ‘in the form of the bread and the wine’ — words omitted in the Latin and Greek versions. He asks for further details, saying: ‘for we have heard of certain things about your views, of which it is impossible for us to approve’. The doctrine of the Holy Church, he maintains, is that at the Lord’s Supper the bread is changed into the very body of Christ and the wine into His very blood. He adds that the bread must be leavened, not unleavened. He points out that Christ did not say ‘This is bread’, or even ‘This is the figure of my body’, but ‘This is My body’. It would indeed be blasphemy to say that the Lord gave to His disciples the flesh that He bore to eat or the blood in His veins to drink, or that He descends physically from heaven when the mysteries are celebrated. It is, he says, by the grace and invocation of the Holy Spirit, which operates and consummates the change, and by our sacred prayers and by the Lord’s own words that the bread and wine are transformed and transmuted into the very flesh and blood of Christ.

Jeremias is here making three points. In two of them he considered that the Lutherans were following the errors of the Latins. The Greeks, faithful to the traditions of the early Church, had long disapproved of the Latin use of unleavened bread, which seemed to them to mar the symbolism of the Sacrament; for the leaven symbolizes the new dispensation. Then Jeremias touches delicately on the Epiklesis, the invocation of the Holy Ghost which to the Greeks completed the change in the elements. They could not condone the Latin omission of the Epiklesis. On the actual question of the change in the elements Jeremias is cautious. He avoids the word μετουσιωσις, which is the exact Greek translation of ‘transubstantiation’. The words that he uses, μεταβολη and μεταποιησις, do not necessarily imply material change. He does not explain the exact nature of the change, leaving it, rather, as a divine mystery. But the Lutheran view that though Christ’s body and blood were present at the Sacrament there was no change in the elements seemed to him inadequate.

The eleventh article of the Confession advocates the use of private confession, though it is not absolutely necessary; nor can one enumerate all one’s petty sins. The Patriarch agrees but thinks that more should be said about the value of confession as spiritual medicine and as leading to true acts of penitence. It must be remembered that to him the act of penitence ranked as a sacrament.

The twelfth article teaches that sinners who have lapsed from grace can receive it again if they repent. It disavows both the Anabaptist view that the saved can never fall from grace and the Novatian view that the lapsed can never recover it. The Patriarch concurs but adds that repentance must be shown by works.

The thirteenth article declares the Sacraments to be proofs of God’s love for men and should be used to stimulate and confirm faith. This seems a little crude to Jeremias, who stresses the need for the Liturgy as providing the necessary framework for the

Sacraments, a re-enactment of the whole divine drama which gives them their spiritual value.

To the fourteenth, which states that only ordained priests should preach or administer the Sacraments, the Patriarch agrees, so long as the ordination has been correctly performed and the hierarchy canonically organized. He clearly doubted whether this was the case with the Lutheran Church.

The fifteenth article pleased him less. It approves of such rites and festivals as are conducive to giving peace and order to the Church but denies that any of them are necessary for salvation or provide the means for acquiring grace. To the Greek Church, with its full calendar of feasts and fasts, such teaching was distressing. The Patriarch, quoting at length from the early Fathers, emphasizes that these holy days and the ceremonies attached to them are lasting reminders of the life of Christ on earth and of the witness of the saints. To deny them any spiritual value is narrow-minded and wrong.

He concurs with the sixteenth article, which says that it is not contrary to the Gospel to obey civil magistrates or to engage in warfare if they should order it. He adds that one should remember, all the same, that obedience to the laws of God and to His ministers is a higher duty, and that no true Christian seeks for worldly power.

He concurs also with the seventeenth article, which foretells the coming of Christ to judge the world and to reward the faithful with eternal life and punish the wicked with eternal torment. He seems to have been unperturbed by the implied denial of the doctrine of Purgatory.

The eighteenth article deals with free will. The Lutherans maintained that, while a man may by the exercise of free will lead a good life, it will avail him nothing unless God gives him grace. This is too close to the doctrine of complete predestination for the Patriarch, who points out, with long quotations from John Chrysostom, that only those freely willing to be saved can be saved. Good deeds conform with the grace of God, but that grace is withdrawn concurrently with an evil deed.

The nineteenth article, declaring that God is not the cause of evil in this world, is perfectly acceptable. The twentieth returns to the problem of faith and works, repeating that, though good works are necessary and indispensable, and it is a libel to say that the Lutherans ignore them, yet they cannot purchase the remission of sins without faith and its accompanying grace. The Patriarch agrees about the dual need for faith and works; but why, he asks, if the Lutherans really value good works, do they censure feasts and fasts, brotherhoods and monasteries? Are these not good deeds done in honour of God and in obedience to his commands? Is a fast not an act of self-discipline? Is not a monastic fraternity an expression of fellowship? Above all, is not the taking of monastic vows an attempt to carry out Christ’s demand that we should rid ourselves of our worldly entanglements?

The Patriarch was especially shocked by the twenty-first and last article, which says that, while congregations should be told of the lives of the saints as examples to be followed, it is contrary to the Scriptures to invoke the saints as mediators before God. Jeremias, after citing the special powers given by Christ to the disciples, answers that true worship should indeed be given to God alone, but that the saints, and, above all, the Mother of God, who by their holiness have been raised to heaven, may lawfully and helpfully be invoked. We can ask the Mother of God, owing to her special relationship, to intercede for us and the archangels and angels to pray for us; and all the saints may be asked for their mediation. It is a sign of humility that we sinners should be shy of making a direct approach to God and should seek the intervention of mortal men and women who have earned salvation.

Jeremias ended his letter with a supplementary chapter, stressing five points. First, he insists again that leavened bread should be used at the Eucharist. Secondly, while he approves of the marriage of secular clergy, the regular clergy should take vows of celibacy and should keep to them. Thirdly, he emphasizes once more the importance of the Liturgy. Fourthly, he repeats that the remission of sin cannot be attained except through confession and the act of penitence, to which he attaches sacramental importance. Finally, and at great length, he gives arguments in support of the institution of monasteries and the taking of monastic vows. Many mortals, he admits, are unfitted to bind themselves to a life of asceticism; and if they lead good lives according to their abilities, they too can reach salvation. But it is, he thinks, a better thing to be ready to forswear the world and to devote one’s life to the disciplined service of God; and for this end monasticism provides the proper means.

His final paragraph is written in a mixture of humility and condescension. ‘And so, most learned Germans,’ he writes, ‘most beloved sons in Christ of Our Mediocrity, as you desire with wisdom and after great counsel and with your whole minds to join yourselves with us to what is the most holy Church of Christ, we, speaking like parents who love their children, gladly receive your charity and humanity into the bosom of our Mediocrity, if you are willing to follow with us the apostolic and synodical traditions and to subject yourselves to them. Then at last truly and sincerely one house will be built with us... and so out of two Churches God’s benevolence will make as it were one, and together we shall live until we are transferred to the heavenly fatherland.’370

This reply reached Germany in the summer of 1576. The German divines detected in it a certain lack of enthusiasm. Crusius arranged a meeting with the theologian Lucius Osiander; and together they composed an answer in which the points to which the Patriarch seemed to object were elucidated and justified. They confined themselves to doctrines mentioned in the Confession of Augsburg and therefore did not touch on matters such as leavened bread, the Liturgy or even monasticism. They attempted to show that their view on justification by faith was not really so very different from the Patriarch’s; and they repeated at some length the Lutheran view that, though Christ’s flesh and blood were present at the Lord’s Supper, there was no material change in the elements. They made it clear that they believed in only two Sacraments and that they could not admit the propriety of invoking the saints.371

Their letter was written in June 1577, but it probably only reached Constantinople in the course of the following year. Once again Jeremias tried to avoid sending an answer. But Gerlach was still in Constantinople, pressing for one. Gerlach left to return to Germany in the spring of 1579. In May Jeremias sent off at last a further statement of his views. His tone was now a little less conciliatory. He pointed out clearly and at greater length the doctrines which the Orthodox Church could not accept. It could not admit the Dual Procession of the Holy Ghost. In spite of what the Lutherans claimed, their views on free will and on justification by faith were not Orthodox and were in the Patriarch’s opinion too crude. While admitting that the Sacraments of baptism and the eucharist ranked above the others, the Patriarch insisted that there were seven sacraments. He repeated that it was correct to invoke the saints and added that respect should be paid to holy images and relics.372

A committee of Lutheran divines, including Crusius, Andreae, Osiander and Gerlach, met at Wurttemberg to compose a further reply, which was dispatched in June 1580. Its tone was very conciliatory. When not yielding on any points it tried to suggest that the doctrinal differences between the Churches on justification by faith, on free will and on the change in the elements at the Lord’s Supper were only matters of terminology, and that other differences could perhaps be treated as differences in ritual and usage.

The Germans had to wait for an answer. Jeremias had been deposed in November 1579, and did not return to office till September 1580. Some months elapsed before he could settle down to compose an answer. It was eventually sent in the summer of 1581. He briefly recapitulated the points of disagreement, then begged for the correspondence to cease. ‘Go your own way’, he wrote, ‘and do not send us further letters on doctrine but only letters written for the sake of friendship.’ In spite of this, the Lutheran committee sent one more letter, almost identical with their last. The Patriarch did not reply to it.373

In 1584 the whole correspondence was published at Wittenberg. The Lutherans might have preferred to keep silence about their failure to achieve union. But a Polish Jesuit, Stanislas Sokolowski, obtained a copy of the Patriarch’s letter of 1576, which he translated into Latin and published in 1582, adding notes to correct Greek doctrines that differed from the Roman.374 The Lutherans felt that they must therefore present the full story.375

The friendly relations continued nevertheless. Jeremias and Theodore Zygomalas kept up their correspondence with Crusius on matters such as Greek linguistic usages and the present state of the great Greek cities of the past. It was in 1581 that Zygomalas sent to Crusius most of the material, including a copy of the Patriarchal Chronicle of Malaxus, that enabled the German scholar to write his great book, Turco-Graecia, which is our main source of information about the Greek world in the sixteenth century.376 But Gerlach’s successor as chaplain to the Imperial embassy, Salomon Schweigger, was unsympathetic. On his return home he wrote a travel-book in which the Orthodox were accused of idolatry and ignorance, even though he admits that the Patriarch entertained him most hospitably and fed him on caviare.377 On the Greek side Gabriel Severus, when resident at Venice, published a work attacking the Lutherans for their doctrine on the Sacraments: though, as with Antony the Eparch some decades earlier, it was their political rather than their doctrinal activities that he really deplored.378

It is difficult to see how any real union between the Orthodox and Lutheran Churches could have been achieved. The Lutherans had not rid themselves of the superstitions of Rome in order to unite with a Church whose devotion to saints and images and monastic vows must have seemed quite as idolatrous. To the Orthodox the Lutherans seemed to combine certain Roman errors with an unsound evangelism and a regrettable taste for iconoclasm. The chief common-ground was a mutual dislike of the Papacy; and that was hardly a sufficient bond.

Nevertheless Greek theological students were always welcomed in Lutheran Germany. Early in the eighteenth century a small theological seminary was endowed for them at Halle in Saxony, which enjoyed a certain success.379 Metrophanes Critopoulos lectured in Germany in 1629 on his journey home from England; and among the earlier students who remained in Germany was a certain Zacharias Gerganos, of whom we know little except that he was invited to Germany in 1619 by the Elector of Saxony and published at Wittenberg in 1622 a treatise dedicated to his patron and intended to bring the two Churches together. He was more Lutheran than Orthodox. The Holy Scriptures, he said, contained all that was necessary for the definition of faith and were fully intelligible and easy to interpret. He denounced the doctrine of Purgatory and vehemently attacked the Bishop of Rome’s claim to primacy. But, unlike the Orthodox and the strict Lutherans, he said that a sinful priest was robbed of grace and therefore could not administer the Sacraments. His book made little impression in Germany, though it seems to have circulated in the East; and we would scarcely have heard of it had it not provoked an angry reply from a Greek educated at Rome at the College of Saint Athanasius, John Matthew Caryophyllus, in a work published at Rome in 1631.380 But John Matthew had family reasons for his horror of such an attitude; for he had a cousin at Constantinople, John Caryophyllus, whose views on transubstantiation and grace showed undoubted Protestant influences.

This cousin had fallen under the spell of one of the most remarkable of all Greek ecclesiastics, Cyril Lucaris.



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